Same Day Pizza Dough Recipe
This same day homemade pizza dough recipe makes a soft, chewy crust with crisp golden edges in a home oven. It is an easy yeast dough made without a stand mixer, using a short rest and a few stretch-and-folds instead of long kneading. If you want homemade pizza tonight but do not want to wait for an overnight rise, this is the pizza dough to make.

I’ve made many versions of pizza dough over the years, from overnight dough to no-knead dough and sourdough pizza dough, but this one fills that sweet spot in the middle. It is quick enough for the same day, easy enough for a beginner, and still gives you a pizza crust that feels homemade in the best way.
And after retesting this recipe again, I updated the method to fit the way I actually make pizza at home now: mix, rest, stretch and fold, divide, rest again, then bake on a hot stone. It is simple, practical, and gives a much better crust than the old mix-and-roll approach. Read my 10 tips for making better homemade pizzas.
Why is this the best pizza crust?
- Same-day pizza dough you can make when the craving hits
- No stand mixer needed and no heavy kneading
- Makes a soft, chewy crust with crisp edges
- Easy to stretch and shape by hand Works beautifully in a home oven with a pizza stone
- A great middle ground between a quick dough and a long-fermented dough

Ingredients and substitutes
You only need a few basic pantry ingredients for this homemade pizza dough recipe, but each one plays an important role.
- Warm water helps hydrate the flour and wake up the yeast. You want it warm, not hot.
- Sugar gives the yeast a little boost and also helps the crust brown better in a home oven.
- Instant yeast keeps this dough fast and reliable. Since this is a same-day pizza dough, instant yeast helps move things along without a long rise.
- Olive oil adds a little flavor and helps make the dough supple and easier to stretch.
- Bread flour gives the dough structure and chew. You can use all-purpose flour, but bread flour gives a stronger, chewier crust.
- Salt is added after the first rest. This gives the flour time to hydrate first, then the salt strengthens the dough and improves flavor.

Step-by-step: Homemade Same Day Pizza Dough From Scratch
1. Mix the dough
In a large bowl, combine the warm water, sugar, olive oil, and instant yeast. Add the flour gradually, mixing until no dry flour remains and you have a shaggy dough. It will look rough at this stage, and that is fine.


2. First rest
Cover the bowl and let the dough rest for 30 minutes. This gives the flour time to hydrate before you add the salt.


3. Add the salt
Sprinkle the salt over the dough and work it in with damp hands until fully incorporated. It may feel slippery at first, but it will smooth out quickly.
Pro tip – Adding the salt after the first rest gives the flour time to hydrate and makes the dough easier to develop with stretch-and-folds.

4. Stretch and fold
Do 3 rounds of stretch and folds, spacing them 15 minutes apart. With each round, lift one side of the dough, stretch it up, and fold it over itself. Turn the bowl and repeat until you’ve folded all sides. The dough will become smoother and stronger after each round.
Pro tip – The rest-and-fold method works very well and keeps the dough easy to handle. But, if you prefer, you can knead the dough for 6 to 7 minutes.

5. Bulk rest
After the third stretch and fold, cover the dough and let it rest for 1 hour. This is when the dough relaxes, rises, and builds more air.


6. Divide the dough
Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and divide it into 3 equal portions. Shape each portion into a ball.


7. Final rest
Cover the dough balls and let them rest for 30 minutes. This final rest helps the gluten relax so the dough is easier to stretch.


8. Shape and bake
Stretch each dough ball gently by hand, leaving a slightly thicker rim around the edge. Top as desired and bake on a fully preheated pizza stone until the crust is golden and the cheese is melted and bubbling.

What is the BEST way to bake pizza in a home oven
- One of the biggest differences between decent homemade pizza and really good homemade pizza is how you bake it.
- For the best crust, place a pizza stone in the oven and preheat it well before baking. A fully heated stone gives the dough a strong burst of heat from below, which helps the crust puff and brown.
- Shape the dough by hand instead of rolling it flat. That keeps more air in the edges and gives you a lighter rim.
- Use enough cheese to cover the pizza, but not so much that the top browns before the crust has time to color. A balanced topping ratio gives you the best result in a home oven.
- If your oven tends to brown the cheese too quickly, reduce the amount of cheese slightly and make sure your stone is fully heated before the pizza goes in.

Can I use a stand mixer for this pizza dough?
Yes, you can make this dough using a stand mixer. After mixing the ingredients, knead the dough on medium speed for about 6 to 7 minutes, until it becomes smooth and elastic.
The dough will still be soft and slightly sticky, but it should pull away from the sides of the bowl. Avoid adding extra flour—this is what helps give the pizza a soft, chewy crust.



Same Day Homemade Pizza Dough
This same day homemade pizza dough makes a soft, chewy crust with crisp golden edges in a home oven. Made with instant yeast, a short rest, and a few stretch-and-folds, it is an easy pizza dough recipe you can make the same day without a long overnight rise.
Video
Ingredients
- 320 g (1⅓ cups) Warm water
- 15 g (1 tbsp) Sugar
- 15 g (1 tbsp) Olive oil
- 7 g (2¼ tsp) Instant yeast
- 500 g (4 cups) Bread flour
- 9 g (1¾ tsp) Salt
Method
- Mix the Dough – In a large bowl, combine the warm water, sugar, olive oil, and instant yeast. Add the flour gradually, mixing until no dry flour remains and you have a shaggy dough. It will look rough at this stage, and that is fine.320 g Warm water, 15 g Sugar, 15 g Olive oil, 7 g Instant yeast, 500 g Bread flour
- First Rest – Cover the bowl and let the dough rest for 30 minutes. This gives the flour time to hydrate before you add the salt.
- Add Salt – Sprinkle the salt over the dough and work it in with damp hands until fully incorporated. It may feel slippery at first, but it will smooth out quickly.9 g Salt
- Stretch & Fold – Do 3 rounds of stretch and folds, spacing them 15 minutes apart. With each round, lift one side of the dough, stretch it up, and fold it over itself. Turn the bowl and repeat until you’ve folded all sides. The dough will become smoother and stronger after each round.
- Bulk Rest – After the third stretch and fold, cover the dough and let it rest for 1 hour. This is when the dough relaxes, rises, and builds more air.
- Divide the dough – Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and divide it into 3 equal portions. Shape each portion into a ball.
- Final Rest – Cover the dough balls and let them rest for 30 minutes. This final rest helps the gluten relax so the dough is easier to stretch.
- Pre the Oven – Preheat the oven to 475°F / 245°C with a pizza stone inside for 30 to 45 minutes.
- Shape and Bake – Stretch each dough ball gently by hand, leaving a slightly thicker rim around the edge. Top as desired and bake on a fully preheated pizza stone until the crust is golden and the cheese is melted and bubbling, about 8 to 12 minutes.
Notes
- Bread flour gives the best chewy crust, but all-purpose flour can be used.
- Do not skip the 30-minute rests. They help develop the dough without kneading.
- If the dough springs back while shaping, let it rest for 5 to 10 minutes.
- Freeze extra dough balls for up to 1 month.
- For more flavor, try my overnight pizza dough.
Equipment you will need
Nutrition
Tried this recipe?
Mention @veenaazmanov_kitchen or tag #veenaazmanovkitchen!Make ahead and storage
- To refrigerate: After dividing the dough into balls, lightly oil and refrigerate for later the same day or overnight.
- To freeze: Place each dough ball in a lightly oiled freezer-safe bag and freeze for up to 1 month. Thaw in the fridge overnight, then let sit at room temperature before stretching.
- Leftover pizza: Store baked leftover pizza in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat in a hot oven for the best texture.

Variations
- For a softer crust – Use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour.
- For more flavor – Make the dough earlier in the day and let it rest a little longer, or use my overnight pizza dough if you want a deeper flavor.
- For an easier low-effort option – Use my no-knead pizza dough.
- For artisan-style flavor – Try my sourdough pizza dough.

Tips for Success
- Use bread flour for the best chew – All-purpose flour works, but bread flour gives a sturdier, chewier crust.
- Do not skip the first rest – That 30-minute rest makes a big difference in dough texture and makes this method easier than traditional kneading.
- Add the salt after the rest – This is part of what makes the dough easier to develop with stretch-and-folds.
- Do not overflour the dough – A slightly tacky dough is better than a dry dough. Too much flour makes the crust dense and harder to stretch.
- Let the dough relax before shaping – If the dough keeps springing back, let it rest for 5 to 10 minutes, then continue stretching.
- Preheat the stone well – A hot stone helps the crust puff and brown properly.
- Do not overload the toppings – Too much sauce, cheese, or wet toppings can weigh the dough down and make the center soggy.

Troubleshooting
| Problem | What happened | How to fix it |
|---|---|---|
| Dough is too sticky | Dough is naturally a bit tacky, or the flour was measured lightly | Lightly flour your hands and work surface, but do not add too much extra flour |
| Dough is hard to stretch | Gluten is too tight | Let the dough rest 5 to 10 minutes, then try again |
| Dough keeps shrinking back | It needs more rest | Cover and let it relax before shaping |
| Crust is dense | Too much flour was added or dough did not rest enough | Measure flour by weight and do not skip the rests |
| Pizza is pale on the bottom | Stone was not hot enough | Preheat the stone longer |
| Cheese browns before crust colors | Too much top heat or too much cheese | Use a lighter hand with cheese and bake on a fully heated stone |
| Dough tears when stretching | It is either too dry or not relaxed enough | Let it rest a few minutes and avoid adding too much flour |
| Crust tastes bland | Not enough salt or underbaked | Keep the salt in the recipe and bake until the crust is truly golden |
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Frequently asked questions
This dough takes about 2 hours total, including resting time, dividing, and final rest. It is much faster than overnight dough, but still gives you a flavorful, chewy crust.
Yes. Bread flour gives a chewier crust, but all-purpose flour works well too.
Yes, but you do not need to. The rest-and-fold method works very well and keeps the dough easy to handle.
Yes. After mixing, you can refrigerate the dough balls and use them later, but for a true make-ahead version with more flavor, I recommend my overnight pizza dough.
Yes. After dividing the dough into balls, lightly oil them, place them in freezer-safe bags, and freeze for up to a month. Thaw overnight in the fridge and bring to room temperature before shaping.
You can bake the pizza, cut the slices, and cool them completely before you place the slices in a ziplock bag. And, you can also freeze these for a long time. But mine have never stayed for more than a week. And, they also make a great snack for kids.
In fact, I often make mini pizzas and save them for the kids’ school snacks. Freeze and thaw them the same way as the slices above.














Thank you for the recipe. I love reading your email at the same time it gives me more information and knowledge about baking.
Thank you Werlie
Done! Thank you!
Hi there,
I’m not seeing the video
Hey Lori. the video is in the recipe card below. Just above ingredients. Thanks
Hello Veena
As always, your recipes have never failed. I tyou
d this pizza dough recipe with great success.
If I want to make the dough in the morning, but only cook it late afternoon of the same day, what would you advise me to do: let the dough stand on the counter top till I’m ready to divide,roll &assemble with toppings or can it be prepared all the way to assembly but baked in the afternoon?
Thank you
Lucy
Hey Lucy,
So happy you are enjoying my recipes. Thanks for the feedback.
For bread and pizza, the best thing you can do is make the dough much ahead of time so it has time to develop additional flavors.
I make my doughs often in the mornings but use it only in the evenings.
What I do is –
prepare the dough – leave it to rise on the counter for an hour.
Then punch down and re-ball it. Make sure it has oil on the surface so it won’t dry out.
Cover with cling wrap and place it in the fridge. You can keep it overnight too.
Take it out two hours before I need to make my bread/pizza.
It takes an hour to come to room temperature –
Then, I shape my bread and let proof again.
Or make pizzas.
Good luck.
Oh I wish I had a pizza stone! Mine broke. Do you think that would have much effect on the recipe if I didn’t use one? I was really into making my own pizza dough for awhile but I bet yours is better! Can’t wait to give it a whirl!
Thanks Denise. I don’t have a pizza peel either. I use a perforated pizza pan that helps very much.
Homemade pizza can’t be beat. But the most important thing is to start off with some good homemade dough. Hubby and I like our pizza on the thin side so that the rest of the ingredients can shine through. We could eat pizza every night — our hips won’t allow that. LOL Your tips are right on. Making the dough is simple once you know the process.
Absolutely, Marisa. A good dough is what you need for a good pizza. I know what you mean. I wish I could eat pizza every day.
This looks so good. We love making our own pizza but we usually just use flat bread and naan. You’ve inspired me to make my own dough!
Thanks, Jolina. You will love this. It’s so simple and easy.
Homemade pizza is the BEST. Making the dough is not as difficult as some people may think. My husband could eat pizza every day if I let him. I know if I shoe him this….I will be making pizza for sure.
Absolutely, Gloria. Nothing like homemade pizza.
I love making pizza at home, and your tips are spot on. Amen to pizza not needing to be pretty. It’s all about the taste!
Thank you, Michelle. Yes, no need to be pretty – what matters is the taste.
Dear veena, just a few days ago I saw your amazing sugar art.
First I want to thank you for sharing your art and how you make it.
When I saw your work I couldn’t believe that you live in Israel. your way of sharing is different from other very good cake decorators that don’t do that for free.
I am in my forties and I live so close to you and I am proud that you are part of our country art industry. I just recently decided to start working as a cake decorator and watching your toutorials gave me the opportunity to learn without spending more money that I have to spend on tools and other.so I want to ask where do you purchase the things for your work?? ( I mean local stores near Raanna). there are many thing I buy on ebay but food couloring and sugarpaste I need to buy here. thank you
Roni
Roni,
I buy a LOT on Ebay and overseas (uk)
I buys some stuff at Meatland here in Ra’ananna.
I buy in bulk from Saar.co.il
I buy Magic colors and Amercolors here in Taste at Ra’anana
Hope this helps.
xxx
thank you for you detailed answer. it helped. wish you all the best and keep creating and share the world your art.
Roni